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Senator Blocks Vote On Ambassador Nominee To Armenia To Protest U.S.

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  • Senator Blocks Vote On Ambassador Nominee To Armenia To Protest U.S.

    SENATOR BLOCKS VOTE ON AMBASSADOR NOMINEE TO ARMENIA TO PROTEST U.S. GENOCIDE POLICY
    By: Donna De La Cruz, AP Worldstream

    Associated Press
    Sept 12 2006

    A senator put a hold Tuesday on the nomination of Richard Hoagland to
    be ambassador to Armenia to protest the Bush administration's refusal
    to classify the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians as genocide.

    Last week, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted 13-5 to send
    Hoagland's nomination to the full Senate for a vote. Until Democratic
    Sen. Robert Menendez lifts his hold, however, the Senate cannot vote
    on Hoagland's nomination. Under Senate rules, any senator can block
    nominations or legislation.

    Menendez said all Americans must recognize the atrocities committed
    between 1915 to 1923 in Armenia, during the waning days of the Ottoman
    Empire, amounted to genocide. The Bush administration and Turkey,
    successor to the Ottoman state, admit many Armenians died but reject
    the genocide classification.

    "Mr. Hoagland has declined to acknowledge the mass killings of the
    Armenians as genocide, and has said that if confirmed, he would work
    to represent the president's policy," Menendez said. "I have great
    concerns that Mr. Hoagland's confirmation would be a step backward."

    The Foreign Relations Committee chairman, Republican Sen. Richard
    Lugar, has said the Senate should not withhold confirmation of Hoagland
    "based on disagreements with administration policy." Lugar has said
    Armenia, which borders Iran, Turkey and Azerbaijan, is an important
    country that should not be left without a U.S. ambassador.

    Hoagland would not use the word genocide at his confirmation hearing
    in June to describe the killings. The current ambassador, John Evans,
    reportedly had his tour of duty cut short because, in a social setting,
    he referred to the killings as genocide.

    Turkey, an important NATO ally, has strongly denounced the
    characterization, and U.S. policymakers are wary of antagonizing that
    country major ally.

    The Bush administration does not question that Ottoman troops killed
    or drove from their homes 1.5 million Armenians starting in 1915. In
    a presidential message on the 91st anniversary April 24, President
    George W. Bush called it "a terrible chapter of history" that "remains
    a source of pain for people in Armenia and for all those who believe
    in freedom, tolerance and the dignity and value of every human life."

    As in previous such messages, he omitted using the word "genocide."
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